8 Ways Corporates Can Engage Startups To Drive Innovation

8 Ways Corporates Can Engage Startups To Drive Innovation

Large organisations are engaging startups in growing numbers, due in part to a realisation that companies have not been built to respond to the accelerating pace of change in a timely manner, and that short of restructuring the entire organisation from the ground up, partnering with startups who are unencumbered by bureaucracy, short-term shareholder demands and employee incentives, is an easier way to tap into emerging technologies, business models and talent.

This makes sense for most large organisations given that startups tend to explore disruptive innovations - usually low margin, small market and high risk to begin with - don’t support short term and often large company growth targets, but if left unchecked, may be the source of dwindling market share a few years down the track (here’s looking at you Blockbuster for passing up the opportunity to buy Netflix for US$50M - the company is today worth 140 times that).

Below are eight ways that corporates can connect with startup ecosystems and engage startups to work collaboratively towards their mutual goals - some light touch and others that require a more serious commitment of time and money.

Corporate Startup Accelerator Program

A corporate accelerator program pairs the domain expertise, resources, brand, distribution channels and networks of a large organisation together with the talent, speed and unencumbered nature of a startup, in order to leverage their respective strengths to take startups from zero to one.

Programs generally run for about 6 months while the startup incubation periods tend to run for 8-13 weeks.

Cost: 9/10

Pros:

Gain financial exposure to disruptive startups (often corporate partners will take equity in the startups at the start of the program or may nominate to invest at the end of a program)

Diversify across a number of startups and concepts (generally 8-10 startups go through an accelerator program)

Identify opportunities to integrate new technologies into the core business

Get across emerging trends

Build relationships with talent in the startup ecosystem

Provide employees with educational opportunities as part of the accelerator

Improve brand

Support talent acquisition and retention

Give employees an opportunity to mentor startups on their domain

Cons:

Requires a considerable amount of effort to source quality entrepreneurs and nurture them throughout a 13-week program which necessitates legals, branding, funding, workspace, mentors, event management, workshops and diligent guidance throughout (a growing number of organisations with domain expertise have been established to run accelerator programs on behalf of large corporates).

You’ve heard of startups pitching their ideas right? Reverse pitching essentially turns the table on startups and asks corporates to pitch the problems they want startup teams to solve and offer a pathway to funding and partnering.

Cost and Effort: 5/10

Pros:

Tap into lots of potential solution to defined problem

Build relationships with the startup ecosystem

Improve brand

Cons:

Limited pool of applicants - you might be limited to startups in your geographic area which may not cast a wide enough net to find quality startups

Limited diversification - corporates usually elect one or two teams to work with so while an idea might be good on the surface, it’s all in the execution - this is why venture capitalists invest in ten startups expecting that one will deliver a significant return

Poor problem definition - in more cases than not large organisations (and startups) define the problem they’re solving incorrectly and if it’s defined incorrectly then what do you expect from the solution?

Incremental focus - by focusing on problems we can see, chances are they’re problems that our competitors have too, and that any solution will only amount to incremental innovation which is where large organisations excel. Use startups to explore disruptive innovation.

An open innovation program poses a simple request of startups, entrepreneurs (and employees, customers, partners, academia and the general public) - “give us your ideas on topic X”.

These programs tend to be run online, supported by an idea platform like Spigit, and can often elicit hundreds of ideas which then lend themselves to subsequently engaging with the people behind the top ideas.

Cost and Effort: 7/10

Pros:

Access a very vast pool of ideas from people and organisations all around the world

Usually there is limited to no pathway to take ideas further after an idea challenge

Teams aren’t committed to their ideas and fall apart after the challenge

Winning ideas are the result of countless iterations and all about execution - the first idea, those submitted to the program, rarely look the same when they break through so you need to be prepared and flexible on how the ideas evolve

Building on the previous point, there’s usually no mechanism to build upon ideas other than simple commenting

Many large corporates are setting up corporate venture capital (CVC) arms simply to invest in emerging talent and gain financial exposure to companies that are treading an upwards trajectory.

Companies can either set up their own funds or take a more hands off approach by investing in existing funds (and perhaps taking a Board seat in the process) that deal with early stage startups or scale-ups.

Cost: 9/10

Pros:

Have deal-making authority

Diversify across a number of startups in your industry

Build relationships with the ecosystem and gain exposure to emerging tech and talent

Hackathons bring teams together for 2-3 day bootcamps, the purpose of which is to define problems, solutions and business models, build prototypes to test key assumptions underpinning those business models with actual customers and present solutions and pitch learnings at the culmination of the program.

Corporates can engage the startup ecosystem to participate in corporate hackathons around a particular theme and put the call out for startup strategists, developers, designers, marketers and more.

Cost: 5/10

Pros:

Low set up and delivery cost

Engage employees and senior executives as part of hackathons to help to shift mindset and culture (demonstrate the value of moving quickly and experimentation)

Build relationships with startups and emerging talent

Brand development

Cons:

Usually there is limited to no pathway to take ideas further after a hackathon

One of the more light touch ways to engage the startup ecosystem is simply to sponsor an industry event or coworking space. It’s questionable how much benefit is derived from doing something like this and while it might give you access to coworking space residents or startups at the event, it’s not something you couldn’t have tapped into by, you know, renting a desk or buying a ticket.

Some organisations may flaunt the benefits of being able to provide services to the startups, but most startups don’t need overpriced tax, accounting and legal services delivered by a big four firm for example, they need to find product market fit.

Cost: 4/10

Pros:

Brand development

Exposure to startup ecosystem

Give employees access to work from the sponsored coworking space or gain access to said event(s)

Cons:

Difficult to track tangible benefit

Small pool - at the mercy of startups in the coworking space or at the event (which may not necessarily be of a high caliber)

Theatre - no clear pathway to developing new lines of revenue for the corporate sponsor

Examples:

Every entrepreneurship event, everywhere.

Mentorship and Distribution

If your organisation is serious about helping startups but is not yet in a position to invest in say a CVC or a startup accelerator, then making some resources available to identify and work with promising startups by way of domain mentorship and providing access to distribution channels and/or customers for testing purposes, can go a long way towards building credible, sustainable relationships with startups, keeping up with change and eyeing off potential investment opportunities.

Cost: 6/10

Pros:

Exposure to the startup ecosystem

Exposure to emerging tech and talent

Identify investment opportunities

Cons:

Little tangible benefit or outcome in the early stages

Considerable effort versus projected reward

Become a Customer

Easy enough and one of the best ways to support a burgeoning company. Be one of the first customers of a startup on its way up.

Cost: 5/10

Pros:

Build relationships

Gain early access to emerging tech that might give you a competitive advantage

Help to guide the conversation on the startup’s and product’s evolution

May be considerably cheaper in the initial stages

Cons:

The product might not be good enough initially on a number of levels to satisfy your needs and will require that you engage with startups to help them towards product market fit

If your organisation is looking to or is assessing the way it goes about engaging with startups, feel free to schedule a quick introductory all with me atcalendly.com/steveglaveskito discuss your objectives and provide some guidance on what your best next steps might be.

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Steve Glaveski

Steve Glaveski is the CEO and Co-Founder of Collective Campus which he established to help companies and their employees to create more meaningful impact in the world in an age of rapid change and increasing uncertainty. Steve also founded Lemonade Stand - a children's entrepreneurship program, wrote the Innovation Manager's Handbook vol 1 and 2, hosts Future², an iTunes chart topping podcast on corporate innovation and entrepreneurship and is a keynote speaker.
He previously founded HOTDESK, an office sharing platform and has worked for the likes of Westpac, Dun & Bradstreet, the Victorian Auditor General's Office, Ernst & Young, KPMG and Macquarie Bank.
Follow him at @steveglaveski and Book a free 15-minute call with Steve to talk through your innovation objectives.

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